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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (April 14, 1953)
Tuesday, April 14, 1953 FACES MANSLAUGHTER CHARGE Pi r 4 1 It) iL f vj C - ' Dr. J. D. Bartell. M.D.. owner and nneratnr nf ?wtoii. hospital at Dallas, is shown at center posting $5000 bond with the Polk county clerk. At left is Sheriff Tony Neu 1 feldt, and at right is Bartell's attorney, C. L. Marsters. . Dr Bartell was arrested Tuesday charged with man slaughter by abortion. local Paragraphs Future Teachers Meet Marylhurst college chapter of Future Teachers of America will hold its fifth annual "Sharing Experiences" night in Flavia salon on the campus Wednesday with Audrey Pear son of Salem presiding. Miss Pearson, a junior majoring in education, is president of the chapter. Among the five 1952 graduates of Marylhurst to speak on the panel are Lee Brown of Salem and Brenda Hanrahan of Woodburn. They will share with education stu dents their own experiences gained as teachers during their first year in the classroom. Spray Notice Mailed - A spray notice for filbert leaf roller control was mailed Mon day to Marion county filbert growers on the county agent's mailing list. County Extension Agent D. L. Rasmussen cau tioned all growers to examine their, trees before deciding whether to spray or dust. Scout Roundtable Cherry City district, Boy Scouts, will conduct a roundtable discus sion at the First Christian church at 7:30 Wednesday night. Alderman Burk 111 Earl Burk, member of the City Council from Ward 8, suffered a stroke Sunday and is a pa tient at Salem Memorial Hos pital where he is reported im- proving. Alderman Burk had a lighter attack several weeks ago. Ward 8 is that part of the city west of the Willamette river. At District Meeting Salem men attended a meeting of District 3, Department of Ore gon, Disabled American Vet erans, in Portland Sunday. They were James Callaway, department vice - commander; Arch L. Brewster, department legislative chairman; and Paul Theralson, past department commander. .The district is composed of chapters in Port land, Oregon City, Astoria, McMinnville, Forest Grove, Stayton and' Salem. Joseph Hershberg of Portland was elected commander of District 3. , . ' ' Eggs tip Again Another one -cent boost on egg prices was listed by local buyers, Tuesday. Ir th? the following are quoted: AA, THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, Satan, Orepm Da 1 1 as Doctor Ar rested On Charge of Abortion By MIKE FORBES . TV- Dallas, April 14 Dr. Isaac David Bartell, MJD., owner and operator of Bartell's hospital . . at 712 Court street, was arrest ed Tuesday morning charged Five Convicts (Continued from Page 1) At the dump spot Winters suddenly sprang from, the truck and started running across the field. The guards chased him and struck him1 a jolting blow with a billy, but he kept going. . While the guards were giv ing their attention to Winters the other four poured out of the truck, threatened the guards with knives and a steel club, and followed Winters. As they ran they dropped four prison-made shivs, all razor-sharp, and a heavy steel rod evidently Intended as a weapon with manslaughter by abortion Dr. Bartell was taken into custody by Sheriff Tony Neu fcldt; District Attorney Walter Foster; State Patrolmen Bob Rissman and Russell Haynes. They were accompanied by In vestigators from the State Med ical Board and the U, S. Nar cotics Bureau at Portland. The indictment bases the manslaughter count upon the charge that. Dr. Bartell ner- formed an illegal operation up on a Salem housewife Septem ber 80, 1951. A large assortment of sur gical instruments in Dr. Bar tell's office was checked by the investigators, and some of them seized as possible evi dence. The physician was taken di rectly to the sheriff's office and then to the county clerk's of fice where he was met by his attorney, C. L. Marsters. He posted $5000 bond and was re leased within a few minutes after, appearing at the court 49 cents; large A, 47-55 cen'. . riJFL" was a k nviA xiicu tai Drew Pearson (Continued from Page 4) needs time to build up China, that the drain of the Korean war is greater than we realize, that Mao with proper incen tive might become another Tito In Korea, Dulles feels that a new boundary drawn across the narrow waist, first would be easier to defend, second would give South Korea three quarters of the population. But to get this line accepted by the Reds may not be easy. It will mean the withdrawal of Chi nese troops from several thou sand square miles of tightly held territory in which the reds have dug trenches and under ground rooms three' tiers deep. So in return for a retreat to the Korean waist, Dulles has been talking about throwing Chiang Kai-shek out the win dow diplomatically speaking. In fact, he's actually talking more anti-Chiang than Dean Acheson who was pilloried by his enemies as the "Red Dean" because he didn't support Chiang. Note C. D. Jackson, former Fortune magazine publisher, now a close White House ad viser, has had a private tiff with Secretary of State Dulles. Not long ago, Dulles reminded Jackson that he, not Jackson, was running the state depart ment. But last week after the White House denial of the Dulles-inspired news stories, some White House advisers figured foreign policy might be better off if C. D. Jackson were run ning the state department. Purple Heart Meets The Auxiliary of the Military Or der of the Purple Heart, Quessth ' Post No. 305, will meet at the home of Mrs. George Quesseth, 1040 North Cottage, Wednesday night at 8 o clock, with Mrs. Quesseth and Mrs. Veva Levinson as hostesses. Afficers will be elected and national and state officers will be guests. Mrs. Verne Ostrander is the retir ing president. Speakers Listed Speakers listed for the meeting of the Salem Toastmasters Club Tuesday night at The Spa will be Jim Calvert, Pat Farrell, Dr. Ralph Gordon, Orval Ken ner and George Moorhead. Dr. Henry Morris will . be toast master, Everett Wilcox will be general critic, Charles Roblin in charge of table topics and Wallace Cowen will be timekeeper. BORN SALEM MEMORIAL HOSPITAL HAMINOB To Rev. Mid Mn. Edward Butlnia, Hubbard, ilrl, April II. KROPS To Mr. and Mrl. Delbtrt Kropi, a boj, April 13. BYERS To Mr. and Mn. wama x- tr, 113 Oak St., Woodburn, a boj, BRYANT To Mr. and Mr. William Brjant, Mill city, a boy, April II. SALEM GENERAL HOSPITAL HANSBERRY To Mr. and Mrl. ! Id Haiuberrj, Sit! Center St, airl, April 13. ,ana rex To Mr, and Mn. John R". Chllda Ave.. a Ilrl, April 13. VAN .BLECK To Mr. and Mrl. Leo nrd Vn BlMk, Rt. . Boa M, a boy. April 13. , EUREN-To Mr. tnd Mn. Cnarlai Buren, 9349 Abrmi Ave., a flrl, April POSTER To Mr. nd Mr, JimM rol t(r, 1110 Mill 8t., a boy, April 11. BAUER To Mr, nd Mr. Mertln Bnuer, ITt N. Weal St, Monmouth. bor, April II. Protest Improvement A protest against the improve ment program for James street in the Keizer district as recent ly sanction by the county court was filed Tuesday by Benton H. Buck. Buck asked that his name be withdrawn from the petition asking for the improve ment. He said the improvement was to be under the Bancroft act and that it called for hard surfacing. The court has set up a policy of permitting a con siderable lapse of time between the process of grading and gra veling and the application of the final surface. Court mem. bers say this method provides a better job. Annexation Election Dated An ordinance bill introduced in the city council meeting Monday night fixes - Friday, June 5, as the date for an elec tion on annexation of Watkins Addition in Polk county, ad joining West Salem. The elec tion will be only by qualified voters in the district and a vote by the people of Salem will not be necessary. Planning: Meetinr A regu lar meeting of the Marion County Planning Commission will be held Friday afternoon of this week at 2 o'clock at the courthouse. Morningside Project Bids for grading and graveling Morningside street, located out side the Salem rjity limits on the south will be opened April 27, in the county court chambers. Marble Tournament Appli cation blanks for competition in the district marble tourna ment sponsored by Marion Post No. 661, Veterans of For eign Wars, have been distri buted to the schools in the Salem area. Competition will be In two classifications 8-12 years and 13-15 years. Time and place for the tournament will be announced within the next three weeks. The state tourney ia to be held in Port land, May 23 and the national tournament in the same city, June 17-20. Burglary Fails An attempt to enter the Kraps and Long printing shop 378 " State street, over the week-end fail ed, investigating police report ed. An attempt was made to force the door with a pry. Window Hit Someone shot through a plate glass window at his home Saturday, Ed Lin den, 1795 Fir street, told city ponce, ir was not known if the shot was an acident or de liberate vandalism. Out on Penitentiary Road a house Dr. Bartell, through his at- Commander Installed M. E. Clemens and 13 other offi cers were installed Monday night by Marion Post 616, Vet erans of Foreign Wars at VFW Hall. The installing officer was Vere McCarthy, past de partment commander. The two vice-commanders install ed were Don Stupka, senior, and James Muckridge, junior. Drastic reduction on new spring dresses silks, crepes, and acetates. Lorman's, 1109 Edgewater, Open till 7:00 p.m. 93 Racing Pigeon Meeting The unerry City Racing Pigeon club will meet at the residence of Al Clark. 3225 D street. Thursday night at 8 o'clock. Police Program Chief of Police Clyde Warren and several members of his force will provide the program dur ing the Salem Lions club luncheon at the Marion hotel Thursday noon. CARD OF THANKS We wish to thank the many friends, neighbors and passers by who stopped to help during the fire which destroyed our home recently. We also wish to thank those who have aided us in many ways to help us get reestablished. Mr. and Mrs. Laird Kaup. 89 was parked nearby. The con vict, Winters still had a knife. Brandishing the shiv, he made Roy E. Olson, 1974 ' Court street, Salem, one of the crew, give him the keys to the car. . Edmond A. Meola, landscape architent for the highway de partment, sensing trouble, had approached the car to see if the keys were in it. The convicts forced him into the car and four of them piled into the vehicle. Llnd, the fifth, left the road and started along Mill creek to the southeast. . The fugitive car was driven wildly through Salem and out the north city limits on High way 99E, When well on the way the convicts robbed Me ola of his money, $16. "fne didn't get tough with me and used no violence other than flashing the knife," Me ola said later at State Police headquarters, - And after the captured pris oners had been searched for weapons, but not yet frisked for other articles, and stood hand cuffed together, one of the Smith boys said to Meola: "I've got your money in my pocket. I'd like to give it back." Meola answered that it would have to be done through the authorities. At Gervais the fugitives left the highway, drove across country to St. Paul and then to Newberg bridge. State Police- had set up a roadblock at the north end of the bridge. The vehicle was on the bridge before the con victs saw it. They stopped the car abruptly and all jumped out. Winters jumped from the railing of the bridge and land er 30 feet below at the edge of the river. The other three took to the brush. All werex caught minutes later. When the convicts fled in the car with Meola, Marion Gleason, 1940 Fisher Road. Sa lem, and Rudolph Siegmund of Eugene, members of the high way crew, hurried to nearby State Police headquarters At the penitentiary the chase was organized by War den Clarence T. Gladden and his assistants. While State of-, ficers and prison guards were following the commandeered car another posse was beating the brush between Salem and Turner in a futile effort to findLind. Warden Gladden said todav he had placed the four men in segregation. When the escape alarm was sounded Monday afternoon all prisoners were locked in their cells so guards and officers could be released to join in the manhunt. Warden Gladden said todav he had discharged Charles Lemon, the gate guard, because he did not shake down the loaded truck thoroughly enough when It left the yard. torney,., denied the charee. stating that he would present the facts in the case at the proper time- and place. Dr. Bartell received his med ical degree from the Univer sity of Oregon in June, 1931. (Continued from Page 1) The joint committee report ed out a bill which authorizes an 80 per cent indemnity pay ment by the state for slaught ered swine infected with vesi cular exenthema. . : The meat packers had sought a full 100 per cept recovery from the state, -but members of the sub-committee held that this was justified in view of the lack of knowledge of the di sease and Its control. ' A bill outlining the duties of the state emergency board was passed out favorably. Among me new leatures of the powers of the board would be authori ty to hire personnel for aueh investigations that the com mittee deems necessary. This feature was considered ai virtually killing chances for setting up ' legislative analy- 1st, although the bill so pro viding will have an airing later in the week. . Senator Dean Walker, co- chairman of the committee said he felt that perhaps it would be better to try out the plan on a restricted basil for the next two years and consider the advisability of providing lor a legislative analyst at the 1959 session of the legislature. Appropriations approved by the committee included: Board of health. $1,819,673: federal matching money, board of health, $2,005, 887; highway commission. $132,658,148; milk marketing administrator. $363,078. Appropriation Bills Penitentiary industries. $1.- 243,123; board of pharmacy, $80,446: Oregon Fair view home, $4,284,498 and HUlcrest home, $565,917. In another action the board voted out an amended aDDro- priation for the Oregon Tech nical Institute. It calls for a $28,048 cut in the original u. propria tlon, which reduced the 1953-55 appropriation to si.. 560,850. lhe committee also reDOrted out enabling legislation for creation of an Oregon Develop ment commission. The mea sure charged the commission with promoting new industries in the state and carries a $50, 000 appropriation for the two year period. Air Transport (Continued from Face 1) Parking (Continued from Page 1) This will be one source of ad ditional money needed to In crease city salaries and wages by $50,000. Another will be by reducing the emergency fund estimate by about $10,000, and another by eliminating from the budget $22,000, for the planned extension of 16th street north. Other savings will come from reducing the cost of city first aid and the fire inspection service by merging them with regular fire department activi ty. Since it appears that a way has been found to balance the budget a general committee meeting that was scheduled for Wednesday night of this week has been deferred to next week. Meantime City Manager J. L, Franzen ia revising the budget The crash scene is 38 or 40 miles southeast of ' Seattle, which had been the plane's des tination. It was within a few minutes of its cross-country destination when it met disas ter in the snow that fell a foot deep overnight atop the Cas cades. "- The twin-engine carrier. ot erated by Miami Airline, Inc., of Florida, was bringing Its military passengers to Seattle on a special charter flight . The non-schedule airline's home office in Miami reported 12 of the soldiers were picked up in Washington and 10 oth ers at Scranton, Pa. A cryptic message at 2:07 a. m. from the plane told of the failure of one of its two engines. It was losing altitude and was down to 4,500 feet. The final radio report was at 2:22 a. m. The pilot then was uncertain of his position. The crew members were: Capt. Albert J. Lerette, Jr., Miami, the pilot; William X. Harshan, Miami, co-pilot; Adra Long, Berkeley, Calif., stewar dess. The names of the ' soldiers aboard were not available im mediately. Minimum Rates (Continued from Page 1) ' ' "I may have some views on the subject but I consider this a fundamental question that must be decided by the legisla ture. It is the assembly's func tion to legislate and my office to administer the legislation that is enacted." Carkin pointed out a compli cation in connection with regu lation of rates on water car riers. This was a recent federal court decision, made by Judge Gus Solomon, in which It was held that water transportation on the Columbia river Is inter state, even though the cargo is carried only between two Ore gon points. Therefore the state has no control over water car rier rates on the. Columbia, where the principal water car riers ply. )'' When4 Senator Brady at tempted to orally amend his own amendments, Chairman Lamport exploded, declaring that such a procedure was un heard ol Brady countered with the assertion that he could see no reason why the amendments he desires to make could not be made in committee. But other members of the committee backed the chairman and as a result the amendments offered by Brady will be printed and another committee . meeting will be held Tuesday or Wed nesday. .' -V-' . .CI House Votes (Continued from Page 1) ' Dr. . Dammasch : told house members that the state has out grown the concept of having everything in Salem ' and the power of decision should be in the hands of the legislature, ' Ike Favors Sale (Continued from Page 1) according to conclusions. the committee's out of a total consumption of ,260,000 long tons of new rub ber." v , , , The federally-owned facili ties now are operated for the government by a . number of rubber, petroleum and chemi cal companies. : The President told Congress that the nation's security in its rubber supply is of paramount importance in any considera tion of disposal of the synthetie facilities.. v Alleged Sex Offender Gets Out of Hospital William' Paul McCane,' a court-committed inmate of Oregon-State hospital, escaped from an . Inmate , work crew Monday afternoon, hospital au thorities announced. , McCane, who was commit ted from Yamhill .county in 1951. is an alleged sex pervert who was committed for molest ing, a child.' He has previous hospital committments in Iowa and California with three pre vious escapes on his record. - He fled from a work -crew that was working in the straw berry field, hospital authori ties said. He is not considered dangerous. McCane is 45 years old, 5 feet 10 inches tall, weighs 122 pounds, has blue , eyes and brown hair. . . ... . AT Fresh killed Grade A hen turkeys, 49c pound. Orwigs Market 3975 Silverton Road, 4-5742. 92 Moving and storage across the street, across the nation. Call Russ Pratt, Capital City Transfer Co. 89 Castle Permanent Wavers, 305 Livesley Bldg., ph. 3-3663. Permanents $5 and up. Ruth Ford, Manager. 89 Good rummage. Over Green- baum's. Wednesday, April 15, 8:30 to 4 p.m. 89 Ham dinner, Highland school Tuesday, April 14, 6-8 p.m. Mothers' club. Adults $1, chil dren to 16. 50c. 89 Good rummage sale by Ains- worth Social club, above Greenbaum's, Thurs., April 16, at 9:30 a.m. 90 SEE Al Kader Kapers, spon sored by Salem Shrine Club, Thursday and Friday, 8 p.m., Scottish Rite Building, 640 South Commercial. Variety nrnirram to please the whole family. Public mvitedl FARM HAZARDS TKa hoiordi of formlno ara araotar thou ony other industry in Ihii country. You ara ntw complatahr tofa from inch donaen. Stora Farm Mutiwl'i Farmar! Comprahamhra Parionnl Liobilily roller Hinrai yw ogoinir rlrtaally arary liability arising out of tha owntrihip or aparofion af a form for paraonol injarloi or property damoga raiultino from an occidant. Whir ran this rilk? Protaet yourulf your tavingi from eoitly domoga nitt. Carry Stota Farm Matml's low-coil Formar'i Comprahtnma Panonal Liability Intaranc. "Si" Olson Art Holscher J. Earl Cook larry Buhfer 626 N. High St. Phone 4221 5 IS i:iihiMijiiii:isjiiiinijiiij;iis,ai1wii;f;Kiririiii,ii,i MImigMWg..BgBfll Sal 3 I -"-TS-v tgA JfSS- i 17 m m HA 1, mm Our Special Anniversary Values Are Too Numerous to Mention . . . Drop in and Let Us Show You a Store Full of Wonderful Sayings ! ! SHAW Capitol Shopping Center WRNItURE FREE Parking